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OPERATIONAL CONTEXT ANALYSIS

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Presentation on theme: "OPERATIONAL CONTEXT ANALYSIS"— Presentation transcript:

1 OPERATIONAL CONTEXT ANALYSIS
Necessary part of design related study and research 3rd IASME / WSEAS International Conference on ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT, ECOSYSTEMS and SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (EEESD'07) Agios Nikolaos, Crete Island, Greece, July 24-26, 2007 Prof.dr.ir. Taeke M. De Jong, chair Technical Ecology And Methodology, chair Regional Design April 7, 2019 Faculty of Architecture, department Urbanism

2 An architectural, urban or regional design is always a case study
and (like any location bound project) consequently is: scale-bound and very context sensitive integrating many less context sensitive contributions: probable futures of specialists desirable futures of politicians, managers and stakeholders together creating a field of problems to be solved and a field of targets to be optimised cannot isolate problems or targets like empirical research April 7, 2019

3 Context sensitive design
cannot isolate problems or targets like empirical research cannot even formulate a proper object of study since the object of study does not exist since it has to be designed, being variable in the head of the designer searches for non-probable possibilities in a given context on a specific level of scale April 7, 2019

4 Design related study The object of design study is variable by definition Social and physical context delimits that object But ‘context’ is everything How to get grip on that vague concept first? April 7, 2019

5 Getting grip on future context
distinguish: Levels of scale (largest frame and smallest detail) Layers of social and physical context Language games supposing probable, desirable or possible future contexts April 7, 2019

6 LEVELS OF SCALE The object of design is variable
But at least the order of size could be determined Then, anything larger or smaller is ‘context’ Determining ‘external variables’ with hidden assumptions: models for anything outside the object of study But conclusions from outside and inside may differ: is a ball convex or is it concave? April 7, 2019

7 Scale paradox On the level of one spot you should conclude ‘difference’ On the level of 7 spots you should conclude ‘equality’ Reversal of conclusions may appear by a factor 3 radius So, the order of size determines your view April 7, 2019

8 Levels of scale to be aware of
Different scales mean different legend units, categories, views, approaches, conclusions April 7, 2019

9 Names and boundaries of size categories
In this presentation ‘nominal values’ indicate an order of size They are ‘elastic’ 10m means something in between 3m and 30m April 7, 2019

10 A frame 100x the granule of a drawing representing a building
r/R determines the resolution of a drawing or discourse, the ‘resolution of the argument’ April 7, 2019

11 Locating a spatial object of design study within its context
If the scale (frame ‘O’ and granule ‘o’) of the object is determined, then the rest is context The programme is a set of desired impacts April 7, 2019

12 The object (O,o) its inconvenient (I) and profitable (P) impacts located
The programme of requirements is a set of desired impacts Locate them to locate the stakeholders Perhaps they are willing to pay the project! April 7, 2019

13 LAYERS OF SOCIAL AND PHYSICAL CONTEXT
Managerial/governmental contexts (active <> passive) Cultural contexts (innovative <> traditional) Economic contexts (growing <> declining) Technological contexts (separating <> connecting) Ecological contexts (differentiating <> equalizing) Spatial contexts (accumulating <> dispersing ) April 7, 2019

14 The future context determines the possibility of realization
The supposed future impacts will be different in different future contexts For example, the economic impact will be different in a growing local economy compared with a declining local economy So, you have to specify your suppositions about the probable future within which your object will have its impacts April 7, 2019

15 Making suppositions about the context more explicit to assess the impacts
You cannot estimate the impacts without suppositions about the context Make them explicit before study April 7, 2019

16 Suppositions about management context on any relevant level of scale
Is it an active management context with much initiatives? Give it sign ‘!’ in the scheme Is it a passive administrative context of just checking and controlling the rules? Note ‘?’ In the last case initiative should be part of your project to get the intended impacts realized And they can be different on different levels of scale April 7, 2019

17 Local initiative expected
April 7, 2019

18 Suppositions about cultural context on any relevant level of scale
For administration and management we took opposites of initiative (!) and checking and controlling (?) They apply on any level of scale. But what about culture? For example, what does ‘culture’ mean on the level of building material (R = 3mm)? To include any level of scale, we propose 'traditional' (<) opposed to 'innovative' or 'open to experiments' (>) April 7, 2019

19 Traditional building expected
April 7, 2019

20 Suppositions about spatial context on any relevant level of scale
Mass can accumulate, concentrate (C) or disperse (D) in space and time That is an essential design context factor What is called mass could be specified later State of dispersion of legend units in a drawing are characteristics of form and composition April 7, 2019

21 Accumulation or sprawl R=30km
Towns can concentrate, disperse or be subject to a policy in between In which spatial context your project will have its impacts? April 7, 2019

22 States of dispersion r=100m
Houses can concentrate or disperse In which spatial context your project will have its impacts? April 7, 2019

23 States of dispersion in the same density on one level of scale
Anything can concentrate or disperse on any level of scale State of dispersion and density are different concepts April 7, 2019

24 One million people in two states of distribution on two levels of scale
April 7, 2019

25 Making suppositions about the context more explicit to assess the impacts
You cannot estimate the impacts without suppositions about the context Make them explicit before study April 7, 2019

26 Locating the object (O,o) its impacts (I) and the origin of a programme (P)
The programme is a set of desired impacts Locate them to locate the stakeholders Perhaps they are willing to pay the project Don’t forget the other impacts April 7, 2019

27 LANGUAGE GAMES One cannot agree with a proposition without determining its modality: I agree it’s is true or probable is different from I agree it’s desirable I agree it’s possible Probable but not desirable detects a problem Desirable but not probable detects an aim April 7, 2019

28 Three language games in a planning team
Different specialists use different language games The same concepts may mean different things uttered by politicians, scientists or designers April 7, 2019

29 Subtracting futures to outline fields of problems and aims
If a statement is probable but not desirable, then it’s a problem The reverse it’s an aim April 7, 2019

30 Adding possible futures, skipping the impossible ones
Probable but not desirable futures are relevant Desirable but not probable ones also Probable and desirable futures are not relevant Impossible and desirable ones also April 7, 2019

31 Proposals for design studies with many specialists and stakeholders
Struggle with: A variable object Uncertain impacts hitting different stakeholders They need an agreement about a supposed future context, properly distinguishing relevant Levels of scale Layers of social and physical context Language games (modalities) April 7, 2019

32 Discussion April 7, 2019


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